The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 13, 1906, Image 7

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oval to
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Georgia
liam J.
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“HAY FEVER
S Having used Peruna for catarrk ana
Ray fever, I can recommend it to all who
are suffering with the above diseases. 1
am happy to be able to say it has helped
me wonderfully.”
—Mayme E. Smith.
MISS MAYME SMITH,
444 E. Mound Street, Columbus, Ohio.
HAY FEVER is endemic catarrh. It is
caused sby some irritating substance in
ine atmosphere during the late suminer
months. It is Sey thought that the
pollen of certain weeds and flowers is the
cause of it.
Change of locality seems to be the only
rational cure. he use of Peruna, how-
ever, stimulates the nervous system’ to re-
sist the effect of the poisonous emanations
and sometimes carries the victim through
the hay fever season without an attack of
the disease.
A large number of people rely upon Pe-
runa for this purpose. Those who do not
find it convenient to RL their location
to avoid Hay Fever would do well to give
Peruna a trial. It has proven of priceless
value to many people.
A sixpence of the reign of Charles
1. was found in the stomach of a bul-
lock killed recently by a Yarmouth
(England) butcher.
FITS, St. Vitus’'Dance: Nervous Diseases per-
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Potatoes Without Plant.
An agricultural experimenter at
Great Falls, Mont. claims to have
produced potatoes without plants and
asserts that he is able to supply the
market with new patotoes at any sea-
son of the year. His ‘experimenting
apparafus consists of a box four by
eight feet in which is a steam coil for
heating. He says that he has discov-
ered a compound which brings the
tuber to maturity without putting
forth roots or stems and without
either light or air reaching them. At
first they rotted when exposed to the
air, but that tendency has now been
corrected and the business goes
swimmingly on, if one may take the
inventor's word for it.—Brooklyn Citi-
zen.
Leopold's Mania for Building.
One of the manias of the King of
the Belgians is building. King Leo-
pold, who spends almost as much time
out of his country as he does in it,
has several’ residences which he sel-
dom or never visits, yet he is con-
stantly adding to them. He has a fine
palace in Brussels, but when within
his own domain he prefers to spend
his time in the country. He is also
the richest monarch in Europe, so far
as real estate is concerned.
First Bell Telephone.
June 25, 1876, at the Centennial ex-
hibition in Philadelphia, the telephone
was for the first time exhibited to the
public. A few months before Alex-
ander Graham Bell had perfected his
invention, but it was not until a
month after the opening of the con-
tennial that it occurred to him to ex-
hibit the wonder-working device at
the great fair.
HOW MANY OF US?
Fail to Select Food Nature Demands
to Ward Off Ailments.
i —
‘A Ky. lady, speaking about food,
says: ‘‘I was accustomed to eating
@ll kinds of ordinary food until, for
some reason, indigestion and nervous
prostration set in.
“After I had run down seriously
my attention was called to the neces-
sity of some change in my diet, and I
discontinued my ordinary breakfast
and began using Grape-Nuts witL a
good quantity of rich cream.
“In a few days my condition
changed in a remarkable way, ang I
began. to have a strength that I had
never been possessed of before, a
vigor of body and a poise of mirnd
that amazed me. It was entirely new’
in my experience.
“My former attacks of indigestion
had been accompanied by heat flashes,
and many times my condition was
distressing with blind spells of dizzi-
ness, rush of blood to the head and
neuralgic pains in the chest.
“Since using Grape-Nuts alone for
breakfast I have been free from these
troubles, except at times when I have
indulged in rich, greasy foods in
quantity, then I would be warned by
a pain under the left shoulder blade,
and unless I heeded the warning the
old trouble would come back, but
when I finally got to know where
these troubles originated I returned
to my Grape-Nuts and cream and the
pain and disturbance left very qu:ck-
ly.
“I am now in prime health as a
result. .of my use of Grape-Nuts.’’
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich.
| be “soggy.”
Cure For § Vegstables.
Always put your vegtables on in
in cold water, the flavor"
and in most cases, the vegetables will
‘Too rapid boiling tough-
ens vegetables, while too little heat
| renders them “flat’ and imsipid. Get
| your vegetables as early in the morn-
‘| ing as possible, and let them be of
the freshest obtainable. ~The Com-
moner.. :
Dishwashing Problem Solved.
“I've almost solved the dishwashing
problem,” said the little West Side
housewife. “I use those lovely carved
wooden trays for bread and cake and
all kinds of dry fruit, and they never
have to be washed. I slip a paper
napkin or doily under the bread and
throw it away when I am through with
iH.
“My salads I serve in the shell of a
grape fruit or an orange, and I cook
all my meats on a plank, including
fish and fowl. I bake French pan-
cakes on a soapstone griddle, and in
all these ways I lighten the burden of
summer housework.”—New York Sun.
Baby's Bed.
One of the sweetest little baby beds
imaginable was made entirely by the
newcomer’s grandmother. First, she
took a good-sized clothesbasket made
of the soft wide splints, but with firm
edges. This was covered entirely with
light blue paper cambric; over this
she put white dotted muslin, with a
frill hanging over the outside and held
close by a blue satin ribbon going all
around the basket and tying in a bow
at the side.
A large sofa pillow of fine curled
hair was sacrificed for the mattress.
This she picked over with great care,
made a pretty little tick of blue and
white striped wash goods and fitted
the mattress into the basket. The tiny
sheets were hemmed by hand and the
soft little white blankets bound with
plue satin ribbon. There was also a
blue and white knitted spread and a
soft, silk-covered eiderdown comforter.
The handles of the basket were left
free and bound closely with blue satin
ribbon. Thus the little bed can be
picked up and carried anywhere with-
out a bit of trouble. In an apartment
of moderate size such a scheme is
well worth while, and it is a great
convenience to be able to carry baby
from room to room in his little bed
so easily.
When he gets big enough he will
have a really, truly bed in a larger
house; but for a tiny baby in a tiny
flat, the home-made basket bed is a
saver of both room and trouble.—New
York Globe.
Recipes.
Peach Meringue Pudding.—Stew the
peaches in a syrup of sugar and water
until tender; remove and boil the syr
up until thick, then pour over the
peaches. Make a cornstarch custard
of the yolks of two or three eggs,
about a pint of milk, two teaspoons
of cornstarch (wet in cold milk), su-
gar and vanilla. Make a meringue of
the whites of the eggs and sugar, and
spread over the peaches. Use the cus-
tard as sauce.
Marbled Veal—Take some cold
roasted fillet of veal, season with
spices and beat into a mortar. Skin a
cold dried tongue, cut it up and pound
it to a paste, adding to it nearly its
weight in fresh butter; put some of the
veal into a pot, then strew in lumps
of the pounded tongue; put in another
layer of veal, and again more tongue;
press it down and pour clarified butter
on the top. This cuts very prettily,
like veined marble. The dressed
white meat of a fowl, rabbit or tur-
key will answer as well as veal.
Deviled Macaroni.— Cook enough
macaroni to make two cupfuls after it
is cooked, blanched and chopped. Make
a good cream sauce, using two table-
spoonfuls each butter and flour, one
cupful warm milk, and salt and pepper
to season. Add to the sauce three
hard- boiled eggs, minced, a table-
spoonful chopped parsley, two table-
spoonfuls onion juice, nutmeg, salt
and paprika to season. Mix the sauce
with the macaroni and ‘turn into a
good-sized ramekin or individual ones,
sprinkle the ‘tops with buttered
crumbs and brown. Just before send-
ing to the table make a little depres-
sion in the top of each and pour in a
teaspoonful of chili sauce.
Boston Toast.—Slices of hot buttered
toast, the raw yolks of three eggs,
one and a half ounces of butter, two
tablespoonfuls of grated cheese, two
chilies, salt and pepper. Melt the
butter in a small saucepan; put in the
yolks of eggs, and stir the mixture
over a gentle heat until it thickens
and becomes creamy; then add the
cheese, mix it thoroughly and season
the mixture highly with salt and
pepper. Make it thoroughly hot, but
ft must not boil. Cut the toast into
neat squares, and put a thick layer of
fhe mixture on each. Put them on
& tin in the oven for a few minutes
to assure them being hot through,
garnish with long strips of the chilies,
and serve at once.
German Women collect
supposed to be the smallest potted
plants in the world. They are cacti
growing in pots about the size of a
what are
thimble.
hot water—not boiling. if ‘put-to cook
will be. lost, 3
YEVSTONE STATE CUELNGS)
“ROUNDHEAD" R REUNION
© The annual ]
[One Hundredth or aon or lead’’ Reg-
iment of Civil Wa ans
September 6 ‘at, “Wi Mi
MWashiston 00613 yi
made by officers a membered
served by: women of West
A business segssion was |
dent, Jultus PY Miller, W:
; treasurer, orge O. Jones,
Washington; chapl Alvin M. Reed
Viennd, ‘©. Eight deaths occurred in
the regiment, since the last relfiion.
EE
Elmer Dempster, the negro Sonar |
ed with ‘murdering Mrs. Samuel
Pearce and her three children in Ce-
cil township, Washington county, on
July 29, was convicted of murder in
the first degree and sentenced to be
hanged. The trial, was one of the
shortest homicide cases ever tried in
‘Washington county. Dempster off-
ered no defense. The case was giv-
en to the jury and after deliberation
of 15 minutes a verdict was return-
ed. It was just five weeks and two
days from th) time of the murder un-
til Dempster was convicted.
Hon. Alexander H. Coffroth, a lead-
er in the Democratic party in Somer-
set county, died at the Markleton
sanitarium. Mr. Coffroth was born in
Somerset in 1828. At the age of 18
he became editor of the Somerset
Visitor, the Democratic organ in
Somerset county. He continued in
this capacity for five years, when he
engaged in the practice of law. He
became a noted criminal lawyer and
was elected to Congress in 1862 and
re-elected in 1864. He insisted in
Congress: that all soldiers should have
the right to vote on the battlefield.
State Dairy and Food Commission
er Warren’s agents visited Steelton
and collected samples of milk from
all the local dealers, and six of the
thirty-eight samples were found to
contain formaldehyde, the chief con-
stituent of the embalming fluid used
by undertakers. The remaining thir-
ty-two samples contained no preserv-
atives, ard suits will be brought
against the dealers whose milk was
found to be ‘‘doctored.”
It is . reported that the United
States Steel corporation has decided
to spend an additional $3,000,000 in
enlarging and completing the new
tube plant in McKeesport. This, if
done will make the total appropria-
tion for that plant reach $15,000,000.
Originally $10,000,000 was appropri-
ated for the erection of the plant and
subsequently it was found necessary
to increase this by $2,000,000.
At a meeting of the directors of
the Farmers & Drovers National
bank of Waynesburg, Senator D. S.
Walton, of Waynesburg was elected
president; William Bailey of Waynes:
burg, an additional director, and
Henry L.. George of Pittsburg assis-
tant cashier.
The jury . empaneled by Coroner
Prothero of Johnstown, to inquire in-
to the death of the seven men wha
were killed in a freight wreck at
Sang Hollow on August 19 returned
a verdict sharply censuring the Penn-
sylvania railroad for its ‘lax methods
of operating trains.”
Gov. Pennypacker appointed Joseph
F. Lamorella of Philadelphia judge of
the orphans’ court of the First Penn-
sylvania judicial district, composed of
Philadelphia, until the first Monday of
January, 1907. Mr. Lamorella suec-
ceeds the late Judge William B. Han-
na.
The Cumberland County Republi-
cans named the following ticket:
Legislature, the Rev. T. J. Ferguson
and J. T. Mackey; sheriff, Joseph E.
Einstein; director of the poor, John
I. Reed® jury commissioner, Thomas
S. Asher; coroner, Dr. S. E. Smith.
State Banking Commissioner Berk-
ey sent to Philadelphia the papers in
connection with the wrecked Real
Estate Trust Company of Philadel-
phia, which the commisioner was di-
rected by Attorney General Carson
to furnish to District Attorney Bell.
Traction cars will be in operation
between Pittsburg and Butler and New
Castle before July 1, 1907, according
to the present plans of the Pittsburg
Harmony, Butler & New Castle Rail-
way Company. Contracts have been
let.
J. V. Thompson of Uniontown has
closed option contracts on 1,200 acres
of coal in three townships of Greene
county at $500 an acre with an ad-
ditional option of $100 on the surface.
The options are of short duration.
Judge Francis J. Kooser of the
Somerset county court refused a new
trial to Samuel Shamberger. Sham-
berger was convicted at the June
term of court of burning his jewelry
store in Butler.
A belt line trolley railroad, which
will encircle New Castle, is to be
built by the Peoples Street Railway
Company, which has just been form-
ed. Branches will extend through
the city.
H. G. Murray, receiver for the de-
funct Delmont National bank, declared
a first dividend of 35 per cent. As
soon as additional money is available
other dividends will be declared.
District Attorney Leech and Coun-
ty Detective Knee of Cambria coun-
ty, were informed of a supposed
double murder, which occurred on a
lonely trail between Garmantown and
Greenwich Mills. The body of a for-
eigner was found literally slashed to
pieces. A trail of blood led off into
the brush, and another Black Hand
mystery is looked for.
The fourth annual reunion of the
Paul family was held on the C. W.
Shipe farm in South Strabane town-
ship, Washington county. Over 100
descendents of James Paul, who came
over from Ireland in 1770, were pres-
ent.
‘of the command and a big dinner was |
die wh oi |
secretary, James C. Stevenson, New
The Age « of Lead.
We are wont to speak of this’ éra
‘““age of iron,” and there is no
ay that, industrially speak-
ing, iron is a ‘precious metal.”
Nevertheless, few people realize
Bow useful, if not absolutely neces-
y, to modern’ CvHaLn. is that
t.
Finetal, but those dist
“Vos are what give it su
de pendent
-are
“to say’ ‘noth-
“ing of the Bearings in the presses as
well as all other kinds of machinery
in which “babbitt’ ‘metal is used.
+ Solder, is another. lead product—
‘what a field of" usefulness that one
form opens up.
use of all‘to which lead is put—paint,
that necessary material which keeps
our houses looking pretty — inside
and out—and preserves them from
decay.
How many of us thank metalic lead
for the comforts of paint? Yet the
best house paint is nothing but me-
talic lead corroded by acid to a white
powder known as ‘‘white lead.” Of
course, there are many imitations of
“white lead,” some of which are sold
as white lead and some which are
offered by the name of ready-pre-
pared paint under the familiar pre-
tense that they are “just as good” as
winite ler1. But all good paint is
made of the metal, jead, corroded and
ground to a fine white powder and
mixed with linseed oil.
White lead is also used in the coat-
ing of fine oil cloths and for many
purposes besides paint.
“Red lead’ is another product of
metalic lead and is what is known as
an oxide of lead, being produced by
burning the metal. Red lead is the
best paint known to preserve iron,
steel or tin, and is used largely in
pointing metal structures, such as
skyscraper skeletons, ~ mills and
bridges.
There are many other products of
the metal lead, ouch as litharge,
orange mineral, etc., which are es-
sential {> many of the arts in which
we never imagine that lead would be
of the least use.
Verily, we live in an age of lead
as well as of iron.
One Tree Built Church.
Among the curiosities of chureh
architecture in America may be men-
tioned the fact that in Santa Rosa,
Cal, is a church with a seating capa-
city of 200, which is built entirely
of timber sawed out of a single red-
wood tree.
SICK FOR TEN YEARS.
Constant Backache, Dropsy, and Se-
vere Bladder Trouble.
Fred W. Harris, of Chestnut St.,
Jefferson, Ohio, says: “For over ten
yeors I suffered from kidney disease.
The third year my
feet and hands would
swell and remain
puffed up for days at
a time. I seemed to
have a constant back-
ache. Finally I got so
bad that I was laid up
in bed with -several
« doctors in attendance.
I thought surely I
would die. I changed medicine and
began using Doan’s Kidney Pills
when I was still in bed. The relief
I found was so great that I kept on
until I had taken about ten boxes.
The kidney secretions became natural
and after years of misery I was cured.
I have increased in weight and show
no symptoms of my former trouble.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
N.Y.
The Southport (England) police of
all ranks have been forbidden to wear
finger rings while on duty.
AWFUL SUFFERING
From Dreadful Pains From Wound on
Foot—System All Run Down-NMi-
raculous Cure by Cuticura.:;
“Words cannot speak highly enough for
the Cuticura Remedies. I am now sev-
enty-two years of age. My system had
been all run down. My blood was so bad
that blood poisoning had set in. I had
several doctors attending me, so finally I
went to the hospital, where I was laid
up for two months. My foot and ankle
were almost beyond recognition. Dark
blood flowed out of wounds in many places
and I was so disheartened that I thought
surely my last chance was slowly leaving
me. As the foot did not improve you can
readily imagine how I felt. I was simply
disgusted and tired of life. I stood this
pain, which was dreadful, for six months,
and during this time I was not able to
wear a shoe and not able to work. Some
one spoke to me about Cuticura. The con-
sequences were I bought a set of tke Cu-
ticura Remedies of one of my friends, who
was a druggist, and the praise that I gave
» after the se®ond application is beyond de-
scription; it seemed a miracle, for the Cu-
ticura Remedies took effect immediately.
I washed the foo* with the Cuticura Soap
before applying the Ointment, and I took
the Resolvent at the same time. After
two weeks’ treatment my foot was healed
completely. People who had seen my foot
during my illness and who Rave seen it
since the cure can hardly belie-e their
own eyes. Robert Schoenhauer, Newburgh,
N. X. Aug. 21, 1905.”
Tokio has eight hundred public
baths, which are used by 300,000 peo-
ple daily.
PUTNAM
© @ny garment without ripping apart
The great-|
4h thé world—the :
De, linotyye ' —& woman whose experience with wo-
4 men s diseases eovers twenty-five years.
_ Then there is the most Hiportant ;
STOP,
AND CONSIDER THE
»
That in pddtesitig Mrs. Pinkham youn
are confiding your private ills to a woman
The present Mrs. Pinkham is the
daughter in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham,
for many years under her direction,
a since her decease her advice has been
freely given to sick women.
Many women suffer in silence and drift along
from bad to worse, knowing full well that they
ought ih ave immediate assistance, buta
od pels them to shrink from expo!
of even ae family physician. It is un
Without mcney or price you can consult a woman
whose knowledge from actual experience is great.
Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation:
Women suffering from any form of female weal-
ness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs.
All letters are received,
opened, read and answered by women only.
Pinkham at Lynn, Mass.
woman can freely talk of her private il
woman; thus has been established the
confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and the
of America which has never been broken. Out
of the vast volume of experience which she
it is more than possible
that she has gained the very knowledge
She asks noth-
ing in return except your good-will, and
her advice has relieved thousands. Surely
any woman, rich or poor, isvery foolish if
she does not take advantage of this gen-
erous offer of assistance.— Lydia E. Pink-
has to draw from,
that will help your case.
ham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
Following we publish two let-
ALL-IMPORTANT & i
¢ > the questions and probable examinations
‘WOMAN!
5
natural
sing them-
necessary.
Iness to a
eternal
women
¢ As you know, I wrote you that my doctor
ters from a woman who accep- | said I must have an operation or I could not
fo live. I then wrote you, telling 3 you my ail-
teq hie invitation, Notas ine ments. I followed your advice ‘and am en-
resuih tirely well. I can walk miles without an
First letter. ac)e or a pain, and I owe my life to you and
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :—
terrible ever,
ciating and I can hardly stand them. My (1
doctor says I have a severe female trouble,
to get well. 1 do not want to submit to it if
1 can possibly help it. Please tell me what
to do. I hope you can relieve me.”—Mrs,
Ma Diminick, oh and E. Capitol Streets,
ngton, D
Ne LR
« After following carefully your advice,
and taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, I am very anxious to send you
my testimonial, that others may know their
value and what you have done for me.
Dlfnmick
and I must go through an operation if I want ington, D
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoun: d,
$e 1 have suffered somethin r wish ev ery suffering woman would read
Ra nt The pains are Er in fesuumanial and realize the value of writ-
ou and your remedy."’—Mrs. Mary
59th and E. Capitol Streets, W ash-
When a medicine has been successful
in restoring to health so many women
whose testimony is so unquestionable,
you cannot well say, without trying it,
“J do not believe it will help me.” If
Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — ig are ill, don’t hesitate to get a bot-
le of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound at once, and write Mrs Pink-
ham, Lynn, Mass., for special advice—
it is free and always helpful.
There are no fewer than 77 distinct
dialects spoken in England.
Mrs. Winglow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma-
tion, allays, pain, cures w ind co lic, 25¢ abottle
A Graveyard Story.
Hard by the newly made grave of
Alfrey Beit is the most curious tomb
in England. It is the tomb of Lady
Anne Grimsten, dawghter of the Earl
Drill for Water
Prospect for Minerals
Drill Testand BiastHoles.
We make
DRILLING MACHINES
For Horse, Steam or
Gasoline Power.
ates
Traction Machine,
LOOMIS MACHINE CO.,
TIFFIN, OHIO.
of Thanet, who died nearly two cen-
tures ago, and was buried in this
same Tewin churchyard. Upon her
deathbed she disregarded the efforts
of those who sought to administer
spiritual comfort. An atheist she had
lived, an atheist she would die. “It
is as likely that I should rise again
from the dead,” she said, ‘‘as that a
tree should grow out of the middle
of my coffin.” A tree has grown out
of the middle of her coffin—an oak—
and by its side a sycamore. The
vault is square, of brick and granite.
The two trees first filled the interior
before they could find a way out.
When they did burst through the
masonry they so spread as complete-
ly to envelop the grave.—St. James
Gazette.
MAKE EVERY DAY
Je=4] COUNT:
no matter how
|» bad the weather
You cannot
afford to be
without a
TOWER'S
WATERPROOF
AQ’ 1 OILED SUIT
‘fl- ,,OR SLICKER
‘When you buy
P/ look for the
/ SIGN OF THE FISH
OVERS
ne
w mT 29 — AJ TOWER 300 TON
— TOWER CAnADan CO Lro ANN ® a
Merely Graceless Upstarts.
Let Americans be duly humble
when they compare themselves with
the Chinese. There is the best of au-
thority, namely, Sir Chentung Lian
Cheng, the minister at Washington of
the Celestial empire, for the state-
ment that more than 2,000 years be-
fore Jefferson began to teach the
principals of true Democracy in the
western hemisphere the wise men and
the statesmen of China were giving
those principles practical application
in government. Of course, a people
who had a Jefferson 1,500 vears be-
fore America was discovered are not
to be scorned by the infant Demo-
cracy of this republic. We are so
new, in fact such parvenues in regard
to government by the people, that
Sir Chentung must consider us grace-
ess upstarts.—DBaltimore Sun.
Banana Culture in Mexico.
The Mexican government is seek-
ing to develop the cultivation of
bananas in that country. For several
years experiments are said to have
been successful, and it is intended to
start two establishments on the gulf
coast in Mexico for the purpose of
converting the banana into a flour,
and of shipping the product to the
United States. As tbe flour is ex-
ceedingly nutritious it is anticipated
that there will be no lack of de-
mand for it.
ni GOLLEGE,
io
U : F PITTSBURE, PA.
A High Grade Commercial and Shorthand
Training School, qualifying young men and
W.L.Douglas $4 Gilt Edge line
cannotbe equailedatanyprice / £:
Douglas shoes.
on the bottom, which protects you against high
prices and inferior shoes. Tal
tute.
and insist upon having them
W. L. DOUGLAS
3.50 &3.00 Shoes
BEST IN THE WORLD
To Shoe raters;
W. Douglas’ Job-
bing House iy the most
<omplet te in this country
end for Catalog
Try W. L. Douglas Women’ S, Misses and
Children’s shoes; for style, fit and wear
they excel other makes.
If I could take you into my large
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand
why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer, and are of greater value
than any “other make.
Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L,
His name and price is stamped
e no substis
Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes
Fast Color Eyelets used; er will not wear brassy,
Write for [ilustrated’ a of Fall Styles.
kW. L. DOUGLAS, Dept. 15, Brockton, Mass,
women for positions of trust and responsibility
demanded in this great financial and manu-
DRO PSY NEW DISCOVERY;
gives quick relief and cures
worst Sansa
Color more goods TIEN and aster a nang SHCA One luc
tefor iree ot —
Book of testimonials and 20 b » 4
Free. H. I. GREEN'S SONS, Box a
FADELE
Backas color sall fibres. They d
Bleach and Mix Oolors.
How to D
(4 pla
BEST BU SBT 5 cor in Mfrs., Dept.
DON'T WORRY ABOUT YOUR FEET!
facturing center: Positions secured for 25 PACKAGED Pog Send 25¢ today for pkg.
graduates. Write for circulars. EERIE C \} {2% Dlastars) of CORNG
Sony AND FARM HOME PAFER, always eight >] it > p
ages occasio Sealy 16 pages, twice a month for : od I buntor n. as new
only 25¢ per year. Six months triali0c. Address | [SENEEEYCNEEEREN Skin. Leavy
Rural Young hele Milton, Pa. Ads.bc perline.| combined. Cure guaranteed o Psapsand Sent
P. 87. 1906. and Shon Si or by mail Pores
sters), by mall only.
. her “iL,
hes t refs
48 p. book free. Hi r
Long experience. [itzge eraid
&Co.Dept.54, W nh n,D.Q
SS DYES
e 1n cold water better than any otha:
ONROE DRUG CO., anh Mian